Abstract

Mucin-type O-glycosylation is an essential post-translational modification required for protein secretion, extracellular matrix formation, and organ growth. O-Glycosylation is initiated by a large family of enzymes (GALNTs in mammals and PGANTs in Drosophila) that catalyze the addition of GalNAc onto the hydroxyl groups of serines or threonines in protein substrates. These enzymes contain two functional domains: a catalytic domain and a C-terminal ricin-like lectin domain comprised of three potential GalNAc recognition repeats termed α, β, and γ. The catalytic domain is responsible for binding donor and acceptor substrates and catalyzing transfer of GalNAc, whereas the lectin domain recognizes more distant extant GalNAc on previously glycosylated substrates. We previously demonstrated a novel role for the α repeat of lectin domain in influencing charged peptide preferences. Here, we further interrogate how the differentially spliced α repeat of the PGANT9A and PGANT9B O-glycosyltransferases confers distinct preferences for a variety of endogenous substrates. Through biochemical analyses and in silico modeling using preferred substrates, we find that a combination of charged residues within the α repeat and charged residues in the flexible gating loop of the catalytic domain distinctively influence the peptide substrate preferences of each splice variant. Moreover, PGANT9A and PGANT9B also display unique glycopeptide preferences. These data illustrate how changes within the noncatalytic lectin domain can alter the recognition of both peptide and glycopeptide substrates. Overall, our results elucidate a novel mechanism for modulating substrate preferences of O-glycosyltransferases via alternative splicing within specific subregions of functional domains.

Highlights

  • Mucin-type O-glycosylation is an essential post-translational modification required for protein secretion, extracellular matrix formation, and organ growth

  • Alternative splicing of the lectin domain a repeat alters mucin peptide preferences pgant9 is differentially spliced in a tissue-specific manner that changes only the a repeat of the lectin region (Fig. 1A) to yield two splice variants known as pgant9A and pgant9B [38]

  • Our previous work suggested a model in which the positively charged a repeat of PGANT9A, which lies in close proximity to the active site, allowed access of negatively charged substrates, whereas the negatively charged a repeat of PGANT9B allowed access of positively charged substrates [38]

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Summary

Introduction

Mucin-type O-glycosylation is an essential post-translational modification required for protein secretion, extracellular matrix formation, and organ growth. Libraries of glycopeptide substrates have revealed isoform-specific preferences for the position of extant GalNAc residues (relative to sites of glycosylation) within the lectin domain [17, 25].

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